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China search giant Baidu blasted by state media
by Staff Writers
Shanghai (AFP) Aug 18, 2011

China's biggest microblog tops 200 million users
Beijing (AFP) Aug 18, 2011 - A popular social networking service used by Chinese people to vent their anger over a deadly July train crash now has more than 200 million users, owner Sina.com said Thursday.

Users of Sina Weibo -- China's answer to Twitter -- sent millions of messages criticising the official response to the disaster, which killed 40 and forced the government to halt the expansion of its high-speed rail programme.

It was credited for prodding China's state-run media into an unusually critical response to the disaster, accusing authorities of ignoring safety concerns in their rush to develop the world's biggest high-speed network.

"Launched less than two years ago, Weibo.com has become an online phenomenon with registered accounts recently surpassing 200 million," Sina.com chief executive Charles Chao said in the company's second-quarter earnings statement.

China -- which has the world's largest online population with 485 million users -- constantly strives to exert its control over the Internet, blocking content it deems politically sensitive as part of a vast censorship system.

But the rise of China's weibos -- microblogs similar to Twitter, which is banned by the communist authorities -- has exposed the difficulty of controlling access to information.

A microblogger living near the accident site in the eastern city of Wenzhou is widely believed to have broken the news of the crash, while millions of others kept up a steady barrage of criticism in the days that followed.

The scale of the response appeared to take authorities by surprise. Shortly after the accident, the People's Daily, the mouthpiece of China's Communist Party, urged officials to use the weibos more to communicate with the public.

Sina Weibo is by far the biggest of the country's social networking sites.

It is China's third most popular website overall after search engine Baidu and QQ.com, an instant messaging service, according to the Internet Society of China.

Sina.com's net income in the second quarter fell to $10 million from $25.2 million in the same period a year earlier. But sales in the period rose 20 percent to $119 million.

China's state media has launched stinging attacks on the nation's hugely popular search engine Baidu, in what analysts say may signal government unease about the firm's growing market power.

This is the second time that Nasdaq-listed Baidu has come under strong media criticism, after state television blasted its advertising practices in 2008, forcing it to revamp part of its business.

The state-run China Central Television (CCTV) once again attacked the firm -- which accounts for more than three-quarters of China's web search market -- earlier this week in a programme that alleged fraud by Baidu advertisers.

The show, aired on CCTV's business channel, claimed Baidu users were losing money on phony airline tickets allegedly sold by advertisers on the search engine, among other charges.

Wu Yue, host of the programme, told the audience: "Obviously Baidu is not able to solve the problem through self-discipline. A company's fundamental motive is to chase profits."

"If there is no law or regulation in place to restrict it, it is difficult to improve the situation at the roots," she said.

The People's Daily, mouthpiece of the ruling Communist Party, joined in the criticism with an opinion piece Tuesday that said Baidu could be "abandoned" by Internet users if it only focused on short-term profits.

"It's time for Baidu to shoulder social responsibility," it said.

A spokesman for the search engine declined to comment.

Bill Bishop, an independent Beijing-based analyst and adviser to Internet start-ups, said there were several theories as to what was behind the criticism, including possible machinations by current or potential competitors.

"Baidu has become an effective monopoly in Internet search," he wrote on his blog DigiCha.

"It is unlikely the government is pleased with Baidu's market power, and the CCTV report may be a sign that Baidu should expect increased scrutiny and regulation."

Several Chinese companies are seeking to chip away at Baidu's market share, including established players like web portals Tencent and Sohu, and Alibaba Group, which is partly owned by Yahoo!.

Newer entrants include state media giants, such as the People's Daily and the official Xinhua news agency, which have both launched search engines.

In 2008, CCTV criticised Baidu for allowing advertisers to pay for space alongside top search results, without labelling it as an ad, prompting the search engine to overhaul its advertising business.

This week's criticism has sent Nasdaq-listed shares of Baidu down more than eight percent.

Dick Wei, a Hong Kong-based analyst with JP Morgan, said the issue could have a short-term impact on the company's revenue, but was still bullish about the firm.

"Given differentiated technology and market leadership, we think the long-term prospects for Baidu are still very positive," he said.

Baidu's major rival remains global Internet giant Google, which partially moved out of the Chinese market last year amid a public spat with Beijing over censorship.

Since then, Google has steadily lost its China market share, which now stands at just 18.9 percent, according to an estimate by China-based technology advisors Analysys International.




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China web giant Baidu apologises after media lashing
Shanghai (AFP) Aug 19, 2011 - China's top search engine Baidu has apologised on state television following a barrage of criticism by official media this week over allegedly fraudulent advertisements.

The state-run China Central Television (CCTV) earlier this week claimed users of the Nasdaq-listed Baidu were losing money on phoney airline tickets allegedly sold by advertisers on the search engine, among other charges.

CCTV's business channel also aired footage of an undercover journalist receiving coaching from a man who appeared to be a Baidu staff member, on how to get approval for pharmaceutical ads using fake documents.

In a live broadcast late Thursday, Wang Zhan, a vice president of sales for Baidu -- which accounts for more than three quarters of China's Internet search market -- apologised "to users affected by the fraudulent information."

"We are reviewing our sales and approval process to try to plug loopholes as soon as possible," he added in comments reported by newspapers Friday.

This is the second time that Baidu has come in for strong media criticism, after state television blasted its advertising practices in 2008, forcing it to revamp part of its business.

At the time, CCTV criticised Baidu for allowing advertisers to pay for space alongside top search results, without labelling it as an ad.

Analysts say the latest round of criticism could have a hidden agenda, such as government worries over the company's near-monopoly on Internet search in China, or attempts by competitors to take away its market share.

During the television broadcast, Wang pledged Baidu would make more efforts to filter information that was illegal.

When asked if the company would change its business model, he replied the Internet environment was "indeed complex" and Baidu would use technology and staff to eliminate fraudulent information.

Baidu shares dropped 6.7 percent on Thursday, bringing total losses so far this week to more than 14 percent.

The firm's major rival remains global Internet giant Google, which partially moved out of the Chinese market last year amid a public spat with Beijing over censorship.

However, it also has a number of Chinese competitors, including new search engines backed by state media giants like Communist Party mouthpiece the People's Daily and the Xinhua news agency.





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